Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote".Rosa rugosa (rugosa rose, beach rose, Japanese rose, or Ramanas rose) is a species of rose native to eastern Asia, in northeastern China, Japan, Korea and southeastern Siberia, where it grows on the coast, often on sanddunes.[1] It should not be confused with Rosa multiflora, which is also known as "Japanese rose". The Latin word "rugosa" means "wrinkled."

Notable for its production of double yellow blooms over an extended
period, this newer cultivar has enjoyed heavy publicity in catalogs.
It appears to resist leaf diseases and grows to 5' tall and wider.
It seldom fruits.

This newer selections offers semi-double blooms that are pink with
a yellow center. The flowers are less fragrant and result in sparse
fruit formation. It grows to 4' tall and wide and is popular among
rose fanciers. It does not score as highly, however, in scientific
trials.

One of the finest overall cultivars, this form offers profuse amounts
of single pink blooms and large hips that appear early and persist.
It grows into a dense, compact plant to 4' tall and offers unsurpassed
disease resistance.

Similar to 'Alboplena', this old cultivar offers semi-double blooms,
healthy disease-resistant foliage and yellow fall color. It forms
little or no fruit and may need rejuvenative pruning to correct legginess.

An older selection that is not as highly recommended today due to
disease problems, this plant offers repeat production of double,
pink-red blooms.

Not as highly recommended due to disease problems, this selection
offers clustered small, double pink blooms on a 3' plant. It offers
repeat flowering and less fruit production than other forms.

Popular culinary uses for rose hips and flowers include jam, jelly,
syrup, vinaigrette, and candies. The seeds in the hips have hairs
that can be irritating and the white bases of the petals are bitter
and should be avoided.

Did you know?

According to Fu (China Plant Red Data Book 1: 558-559. 1992), Rosa rugosa is endangered as a wild plant by picking and uprooting. [1]

Identification

Rosa rugosa is a suckering shrub which develops new plants from the roots and forms dense thickets 1–1.50 m tall with stems densely covered in numerous short, straight prickles 3–10 mm long. The leaves are 8–15 cm long, pinnate with 5–9 leaflets, most often 7, each leaflet 3–4 cm long, with a distinctly corrugated (rugose, hence the species' name) surface. The flowers are pleasantly scented, dark pink to white (on R. rugosa f. alba(Ware) Rehder), 6–9 cm across, with somewhat wrinkled petals; flowering occurs in spring.[1]
The hips are large, 2–3 cm diameter, and often shorter than their diameter, not elongated; in late summer and early autumn the plants often bear fruit and flowers at the same time. The leaves typically turn bright yellow before falling in autumn.[citation needed]Template:Gallery

Flowers Bloom Period: april; Flowers: notable for its production of double yellow blooms over an extended period fragrant blooms in june through august borne in clusters or found singly showy; Flower Conspicuous: double;.

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